Amy Redford, daughter of actor and director Robert Redford, has urged fans and online publishers to stop sharing artificial intelligence-generated tributes that she says fabricate funerals, quotes, and family reactions. In an Instagram post this week, she clarified that no public funeral has been held and that the family is still working on plans for a memorial. She said a stream of AI videos and images is presenting invented scenes as fact, making a painful moment harder for relatives who are still grieving.
Her message comes just over two months after Robert Redford died on September 16, 2025, at age 89, at his home in Sundance, Utah. News of his death prompted widespread remembrance centered on his decades as a leading actor, his work as a filmmaker, and his role in founding the Sundance Film Festival, which became a major platform for independent cinema. Amy Redford thanked those who have offered genuine support, but warned that synthetic media can blur what is real and what is staged, even when posted with loving intent.
The episode arrives during a widening entertainment-industry debate about digital replicas and posthumous likenesses. California’s AB 1836, effective January 1, 2025, expanded the state’s post-mortem right of publicity to cover AI-created voice or visual likenesses and gives an estate tools to pursue unauthorized uses. Federal lawmakers have also debated the proposed No Fakes Act, which would create a national right of publicity for digital doubles, though it has not passed. Performers and unions have pressed for consent-first rules to prevent misuse of both living artists and estates.
For the Redford family, the request is straightforward: let authentic memories lead. Amy Redford asked people to pause before reposting AI material, to share verified stories instead, and to wait for official memorial details. The family has not announced a date or location for a public service.















































